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Not that TSN wasn't once the greatest baseball publication that we'll ever see or know, but that was somewhere back during the Kennedy administration.

Still true as late as early Nixon. One of my great childhood memories is going down to the mailbox like every 15 minutes on Saturday mornings, and eventually being rewarded with the sight of that brown wrapper.

I was a devotee, in the late 60s/early 70s, of Who's Who in Baseball, Baseball Digest, and of course various encyclopedias, including the brand-new Macmillan. But seeing The Sporting News was like being invited into a postgraduate course in baseball. There was some seriously esoteric information on tap there, and it was hard study. I was never a subscriber, and have to admit therefore that I am not nostalgically broken up over this news. Like others, I haven't seen the print edition in a long time.

I too was a devotee in the late 60s/early 70s. But it was weirdly hard to get in Canada. They weren't keen on subscriptions to Canada (weird rules ended up costing a fortune in postage IIRC) so getting it always involved a trip to one of the few places that carried it -- usually about 4 days late.

For you young folks, this is the way life used to be: let's say you were a fan of the Oakland A's living on the east coast. You would follow the team by reading the box scores in the local paper, but lots of times the games on the west coast would end so late the box scores wouldn't make it into the paper. Then lets say you noticed the A's starting third baseman wasn't in the lineup for a few games. You would then patiently wait for The Sporting News to arrive and hopefully you would then learn what happened ( benched, injury, etc.). Plus you could catch up on the box scores that didn't make into the paper.

Then lets say you noticed the A's starting third baseman wasn't in the lineup for a few games. You would then patiently wait for The Sporting News to arrive and hopefully you would then learn what happened ( benched, injury, etc.).

It was usually polio, smallpox, or failure to weat an onion in his belt.

I was a devotee, in the late 60s/early 70s, of Who's Who in Baseball, Baseball Digest, and of course various encyclopedias, including the brand-new Macmillan. But seeing The Sporting News was like being invited into a postgraduate course in baseball. There was some seriously esoteric information on tap there, and it was hard study.

TSN stopped running a lot of the real esoteric baseball information in the mid-1960s when it went to its all-sports format; the guys responsible for that stuff, like Bob Davids and Cliff Kachline, started SABR in 1971.

Plus you could catch up on the box scores that didn't make into the paper.

Your paper didn't print previous day's box scores? Did that only start in the 80s?

depends on the time zone you lived in, and where you lived in relation to where your local paper was published.

you might miss the west coast games, and under the standings, if you're were checking for scores you'd see the dreaded 'Los Angeles at San Diego, late.'
Our paper was pretty good about eventually publishing the 'late' box the next day, but not always.

TSN was good for that. This is where a hotel version of the USA Today on the east coast was always worthless. You'd get an early deadline paper, and virtually no box scores that weren't played in the eastern time zone.

Then lets say you noticed the A's starting third baseman wasn't in the lineup for a few games.

I was all ready to say "probably just Wayne Gross being terrible again," but then I looked him up and he was a better player than I realized. Although it's surprising how little it took to put up a decent OPS+ in the early 1980s.

you might miss the west coast games, and under the standings, if you're were checking for scores you'd see the dreaded 'Los Angeles at San Diego, late.'

Dreaded indeed. I lived in an east coast city and when my team played on the west coast, I wasn't seeing the boxscore until two days later, when the newspaper would play catch up with missed west coast boxscores.

For you young folks, this is the way life used to be

8 - You nailed it. My experience exactly. Without being old enough to have lived through that, younger people will find your history lesson unfathomable, almost like we're the old guys in Monty Python's Four Yorkshiremen skit.

Eh, I've traveled and lived around the world and the two best things that come in brown paper/wrapper are original Tommy's burgers in LA and fish and chips in Australia. Though in both those cases I'm thinking the grease/oil may have turned the wrapping paper more brown then intended originally...

I also remember as a kid calculating our fantasy baseball standings by hand every weekend using the most recent TSN (or maybe it was Baseball Weekly).

Yes, this, in the 1980s. Including holding onto the older editions so you could subtract out old statistics for free agents and traded players. It was an 8-10 hour experience every week for me, before we went onto non-web-based paid stat services to do this.

another irritating thing was if you were in an AL only town (or vice versa) and there was a crowded sports section and something had to go, it was always a box score or two from the 'other' league. Or it was edited in a random way by the copy desk. Maybe the pitching lines were omitted, or maybe they cut out the umpires, TOG and Attendance, or sometimes you got just the line score.

The real descent began with J.G. Taylor Spink's death in late 1962. His son wasn't up to his legacy.

Then the classic look gradually faded away in 1963-64, when the front cover went all photographic instead of featuring Mullin / Darvas / Hubenthal / etc. cartoons. In many ways those cartoons were what gave TSM its most distinctive look.

Most everything else stayed in place for the rest of the decade, and in fact when Leonard Koppett came along sometime in the late 60's or early 70's that was a huge addition. But for sheer depth of coverage down to the minors (with box scores down to Class AA) and for features and visuals that you couldn't find anywhere else, TSN's true heyday was from about 1946 through 1962. Trust me on this one. (smile)

Geez. Thought they'd gone digital-only about a year ago. I had a cheap sub to the biweekly mag, & after it went monthly I received only a single issue. Poked around the the net a few weeks ago & saw no reference to a continuing print existence at that time. Oh, well.

Man, I loved TSN as a kid, as much because it was the only steady source for American Basketball Assn. news (columns by Jim O'Brien &, later, Woody Paige) as for its unparalleled baseball coverage. I remember after I got out of the hospital in the fall of '76 (my senior year of high school) after a failed attempt to diagnose what turned out some 12 years later to be Crohn's disease, I either missed my sub copy or my sub had lapsed, & since no place in my hometown carried it, I walked the 6 miles to the county seat to buy a copy, even though that marked the early part of the first post-merger NBA season. (Good thing they had it in stock. Good thing, too, that our high school counselor happened to see me & gave me a ride back home.) We didn't have a car at that time because ours had been totalled by a drunk driver who ran off the road & smashed into our '63 Rambler in the hopsital parking lot while my mother was visiting me. Not-so-good times.

Absolutely. This announcement comes as no surprise to those who remember when they started their daily PDFs a few years back. Over the last decade or so, I've actually had a hard time finding stores that sell TSN. It would have been forgivable if you did not know there was a printed product left to discontinue.

TSN is an excellent example of a very important newspaper that was mismanaged into obscurity. Looking into the future from the vantage point of the 1950s and early 1960s, I don't think anybody would have seen its demise coming.

What absolutely flabbergasts me is that this paper became less relevant as the statistical revolution in baseball took off. TSN was the paper that printed the boxscores that Bill James and company used to do their analysis in the first place, for crying out loud. One would think that a halfway competent management group would have figured out a way to cash in on its huge market share on baseball boxscores in the 70s and 80s. Instead, they did away with them, and all the statistically minded fans went elsewhere.

TSN tried to become Sports Illustrated. For the life of me, I'll never understand why.

By the way, their daily publication stinks. I can't think of a single reason to go the TSN website, honestly. And thank God for SABR's Paper of Record subscription!